Posts Tagged ‘Black Sabbath’

Black Sabbath in 1970

So how loud was it inside the Record Plant — then located near the corner of 3rd Street and La Cienega Boulevard as Black Sabbath recorded basic tracks, all in the same room, for “Vol. 4″, the only album the band’s original lineup ever recorded in Los Angeles?

“I think that question might be a little difficult for me because I’m on cans, on headphones, while we’re tracking. But I’m sure we played pretty fucking loud,” says drummer Bill Ward with a laugh. “I would walk into the studio when Tony was doing his [guitar] overdubs and man, it’s just like holy fucking shit, really loud. And that’s just doing overdubs. Or Geezer. The [speaker] cabs are flying, man, there’s no doubt about it.”

After recording their first three brilliant, heavy-metal-pioneering albums in England, in spring 1972 Black Sabbath  Ward, guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler and singer Ozzy Osbourne  were living in a rented Bel-Air mansion while working on the follow-up to their 1971 disc, “Master of Reality”.

This was the band’s most experimental music yet. The piano balladry of “Changes.” An orchestra on the haunting coke paean “Snowblind.” Cuban rhythmic influences on “Supernaut,” a track with such an infectious, powerful groove it “was one of John Bonham’s favorite songs, actually,” Ward says. And of course Sabbath’s hallmark mix of savage guitars, jazz-gone-wild rhythmic counterpoint and Osbourne’s eerie, melodic vocals.

“We had been working literally non-stop,” says Ward, a total English gentleman who now lives in Seal Beach. “At that point we’d been on the road I think for probably about four years and we hadn’t stopped. We’d visited L.A. when we played concerts here and all of us liked Los Angeles. We felt it was pretty laid-back here, so we probably were attracted to the fact it was a much slower pace here and we could actually relax.”

“Relax” might not be the best word for Sabbath’s activities at the mansion, which Ward recalls as being in a colonial style with a white exterior. The address of the mansion was 773 Stradella Road. The Du Pont family once lived there, and Charlie’s Angels sexpot Jaclyn Smith would call it home several years later.

It’s no secret the band consumed Scarface-like piles of powder and other substances at the time, resulting in the kind of mirth ’70s rock bands specialized in. “There was one point where Ozzy had spray-painted my private parts,” Ward remembers. “And then I read on the spray paint it was poisonous and do not apply to the skin, so in fear of my private parts, I panicked and went kind of crazy.” (Osbourne, in his 2010 memoir I Am Ozzy, wrote that it was Iommi who spray-painted Ward’s junk.)

“We’d play all kinds of stupid pranks and things like that. That’s when the band was great,” Ward continues. “I’m not saying the band’s not great now, but there was truly a lot of camaraderie and a lot of really, really good stuff at that time period.”

The contrast of SUV-squashing riffs and intricate rhythms makes some of Vol. 4’s most enduring cuts, like “Wheels of Confusion” and “Tomorrow’s Dream,” particularly powerful. Ward’s groove on “Snowblind” is strikingly panther-like and patient, particularly on a song about cocaine. For the Vol. 4 sessions, the drummer used a mix-and-match kit made up of specifically selected Slingerland, Ludwig and Hayman drums, including double 26-inch bass drums.

“Tony Iommi once told me that in order to be truly heavy, you also need to lighten it up because when you get heavy again, it makes it all the more impactful,” says That Metal Show and Sirius/XM radio host, author and renowned heavy metal expert Eddie Trunk. “I think with Vol. 4 you start to see some signs of the variety and dynamics. No place further than with a song like ‘Changes,’ which was a tremendous turn for the band and still holds up incredibly well. It’s really a dynamic record that shows a lot more was going on with Black Sabbath than just these brutally heavy riffs.”

Released in September 1972, Vol. 4 also features one of Black Sabbath’s most iconic album covers: a yellow-monochrome image of Ozzy, wearing one of the fringed shirts he favored for years, his arms extended in a peace sign. Says Trunk, “I got to say, it’s always a flag to me when a band that I love more prominently features one member on the cover than anyone else. You’re saying to yourself, ‘Wow is this just one guy’s band?’”

Trunk places Vol. 4 within the top three of the classic lineup Sabbath LPs, up with Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and of course Paranoid. Interestingly, he discovered the band through 1981’s Heaven and Hell, the group’s first disc with Ronnie James Dio as singer, and eventually worked his way backward into the Ozzy-era catalog, beginning with the compilation We Sold Our Soul for Rock ‘n’ Roll.

Calling from his New Jersey home office, Trunk notes that while Vol. 4 contains songs like “Supernaut” considered classics by connoisseurs, “You don’t really have … that across-the-board smash hit. ‘Snowblind’ may be my favorite track on the record because it’s just got that great groove and slams in with that killer riff, and they’re singing about something that, at the time, was very near and dear to their heart.”

During their Vol. 4 period, when not tracking at the Record Plant or getting debauched at the Stradella Road manse, Ward says Sabbath would “just hang out with some of the heads in the Valley and get high, and we went to Laguna [Beach] to get high as well. Back then, for me there was nothing like dropping some windowpane [LSD] and just letting the surf roll in, you know? Just listening to everybody on the beach.” The influence of those blurry, bucolic beach trips can be heard on Iommi’s string-swathed instrumental “Laguna Sunrise.” “It’s a credit to Tony he was able to write this incredible melody and these incredible guitar parts which actually completely summarized Laguna,” Ward says.”It just couldn’t have fit it any better, man.”

Black Sabbath onstage in 1976.

Ward, who has been sober for years now, says Black Sabbath’s Los Angeles days were super-indulgent for everyone in the band. When it was time to cut tracks, he did so with a clear head, “but when the sessions were winding down, I used to wind up. We used to have a lot of people in the back getting high. A lot of naked people. It was just sex, drugs and rock & roll; that’s what it was like back then, so when I look back at it now it’s like, ‘Wow, fucking hell. Did we really do that?’” He laughs. “All the debauchery that actually brought me to my knees. It took a few more years, but it actually brought me to a place where I had to seriously, seriously look at changing my life.”

Black Sabbath originally wanted to title their fourth album Snowblind. But after the band’s U.S. label, Warner Bros., balked at naming not just a song but an entire LP after cocaine, Sabbath shifted on a whim to Vol. 4, possibly at the suggestion of road manager Spock Wall.

Ward says Wall also played a key role in getting drum and guitar sounds on the record, Sabbath’s first without producer Rodger Bain. Although the band’s then-manager Patrick Meehan was credited as co-producer on Vol. 4, Ward recalls the band self-producing and that “I felt a lot of detachment from Patrick.”

Black Sabbath’s 1970 self-titled debut remains Ward’s favorite of the band’s LPs. But he listened to spiraling Vol. 4 track “Cornucopia” less than 24 hours before this interview, and frequently plays the track on his monthly Internet radio show, Rock 50.

Alas, Ward is not behind the drum kit for the group’s (allegedly) final “The End Tour.” The band previously embarked on a farewell tour in 1999. Ward has said the split goes back to an unfavorable contract he was presented with before sessions for Sabbath’s 13 album, recorded in late 2012 and 2013. Osbourne has said Ward was out of shape. Tommy Clufetos, from Osbourne’s solo band, will be on drums when Sabbath performs at the Forum on Feb. 11th.

Some accounts say Sabbath made a stab at also recording their next album, 1973’s Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, in Los Angeles, but Ward says no such recording sessions ever happened. “I’m sure we had plenty of riffs and ideas; that certainly wasn’t uncommon. But it was time for a change and that’s when we went and did Sabbath Bloody Sabbath in a castle in England. I think it might have been time to shake out the party that we’d been in and come back and really get into some focused, damp weather music.”

Quite predictably, Black Sabbath fans have begun posting the four previously unreleased songs from Black Sabbath‘s new tour-only CD The End onto YouTube. Unless they’ve been taken down since this story was posted, you can listen to “Season of the Dead” above and “Cry All Night,” “Take Me Home” and “Isolated Man” below.

The new eight-song collection, split down the middle between newly unearthed tracks from the recording sessions for 2013’s 13 album and live versions of songs from that same record, is only being sold at concerts on the group’s current tour, also titled The End. The new songs are exactly what you’d expect and hope for: big, lumbering monsters featuring Ozzy Osbourne‘s distinctive vocals and more worthy selections from Tony Iommi‘s seemingly endless supply of fantastic guitar riffs.

The legendary metal group (founding members Osbourne, Iommi and Geezer Butler are joined by drummer Tommy Clufetos for this tour) is two shows into what they’re promising will be their final farewell.

The End tour continues Monday night (Jan. 25) in Minneapolis, Minn. You can see all the officially confirmed dates — currently ending Sept. 21 in Phoenix, Ariz. – on the band’s website. However, according to a report from opening act Rival Sons, the trek will be extended well into 2017.

Black Sabbath kicked off their final world tour last night in Omaha, Neb. with a 14-song set largely dedicated to their most popular songs. You can see the full setlist below.

The founding members Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler were again joined by Tommy Clufetos, who took over for original drummer Bill Ward on Sabbath’s 2012-2014 reunion tour following a still-acrimonious split.

In Omaha, the quintessential heavy metal band kicked off its farewell tour — dubbed “The End” — and said this really is the final hurrah. Nearly 50 years after first forming (and 34 years to the day after Osbourne bit the head off of a bat), Black Sabbath took the stage with thundering versions of “Paranoid,” “War Pigs,” “Iron Man” and the eponymous “Black Sabbath.”

Even though it wasn’t a perfect show, it was tough to say goodbye. Black Sabbath basically invented heavy metal. Back then, they were just four guys in Birmingham. Fast forward 50 years and their guitar tones, howling occult lyrics, and slamming drumbeats are standard metal stuff, and those same guys stood in front of nearly 13,000 screaming fans. Wednesday’s show was just shy of a sellout, and people packed to the rafters to watch the band kick off its final jaunt with a no-nonsense 90-minute set. The thousands — heavily male, dressed in black and often heavily tattooed — heard the first ominous notes of “Black Sabbath” and jumped to their feet to hear the band run through its classics.

Backed by a screen full of psychedelic video streams and flanked by six flaming pyres, frontman Ozzy Osbourne, bassist Geezer Butler and guitarist Tony Iommi dressed all in black for the occasion. (They were joined by drummer Tommy Clufetos, who has sat in for original drummer Bill Ward for several years.)

Iommi was pure thundering bliss on guitar. Playing some battered-up, well-used Gibson SGs, the legendary picker had a thick tone that was often menacing, sometimes forceful and always bursting with lightning. Butler availed himself well, especially on the band’s more recognizable basslines such as “War Pigs.” And Culfetos beat the drums like he hated them. Then there was the Ozzman.

Osbourne’s voice wasn’t great. It wasn’t awful, really. It simply wasn’t very good. On Wednesday, he was sometimes flat. He was sometimes pitchy, occasionally off-key. He almost never hit the notes he was looking for.

Osbourne did better on less vocally demanding songs such as “Dirty Women” and “Black Sabbath.”

It was the first show of the tour, so maybe his voice will warm up. Maybe they’re still working out the sound in his monitors. Maybe it’s just that he’s 67 years old.

It’s not clear what the cause was, but Sabbath also shuffled around its original setlist and skipped three songs. After Osbourne and Iommi consulted on stage, “Children of the Grave” was moved from the end of the setlist. They then skipped “God is Dead,” Under the Sun” and “After Forever” and finished the show with “Dirty Women” and “Paranoid.” The show came in 30 minutes under it’s originally scheduled runtime. (Read the show’s setlist below.) But nothing could stop fans from loving him.

They screamed every word to “Snowblind,” and danced around for “Children of the Grave.”

When the chugging chords of “Paranoid” signaled the end of the show, the arena was brought to its feet while purple confetti rained from above. When the show ended, the band took its bow and the house lights came up, many people refused to leave their seats. It was too hard to admit it was over. “This is the beginning of the end for us and I just wanted to say thank you for all of your support all these years,” Osbourne said at the end. “Thank you. Goodnight. God bless you all.”

As hinted at on an promotional video highlighting the band’s rehearsal sessions for The End tour, 1970’s slow-burning, bass-heavy “Hand of Doom” was performed for the first time in almost 40 years, alongside expected classics such as opener “Black Sabbath,” “War Pigs” and “Children of the Grave.

Unlike Black Sabbath’s last tour, nothing from their most recent album 13 was performed at last night’s show. Nor were any songs from The End, a new CD featuring four unreleased studio tracks from the 13 sessions and four live performances. This CD will only be sold at shows on this tour.

The End tour continues tomorrow night in Chicago, Ill., and is currently scheduled to conclude Sept. 21st in Phoenix, Ariz. You can get all of Black Sabbath’s tour dates at the band’s official site.

Black Sabbath Setlist: 1/20/16 Omaha, Neb.

01. “Black Sabbath”
02. “Fairies Wear Boots”
03. “Tomorrow’s Dream”
04. “Into The Void”
05. “Snowblind”
06. “War Pigs”
07. “Behind The Wall Of Sleep”
08. “N.I.B.”
09. “Hand Of Doom”
10. “Rat Salad”
11. “Iron Man”
12. “Children Of The Grave”
13. “Dirty Women”
14. “Paranoid”

 

Black Sabbath

When Black Sabbath kick off The End world tour next week, fans at each stop will have the chance to buy an exclusive, limited-edition CD. The eight-track album will include previously unreleased material: four outtakes from the 2013 album 13, and four live cuts from the band’s tour in support of it.

You can see the track listing for the CD below.

The disc also features exclusive artwork by Shepard Fairey/Obey Giant, and each stop on the tour will include exclusive posters made especially for each market.

Black Sabbath’s final tour launches in Omaha, Neb., on Jan. 20. After a month of North American dates, the group will head to Australia and New Zealand in mid-April for two weeks of shows. They’ll then play Europe for six weeks starting in early June, before wrapping up the live dates with a month in North America, with a final show now scheduled for Sept. 21st in Phoenix.

The band has said that this will be its last tour, and there will probably be no more new music. Singer Ozzy Osbourne has stated that he doesn’t want to make another Sabbath album, even though guitarist Tony Iommi isn’t against the idea. As Black Sabbath gear up for the big tour, they recently released a sneak peek in the form of a 15-second “Final Tour Rehearsal Teaser,”

Black Sabbath, ‘The End’ CD Track Listing
1. “Season of the Dead”
2. “Cry All Night”
3. “Take Me Home”
4. “Isolated Man”
5. “God is Dead?” (Live Sydney, Australia, 4/27/13)
6. “Under the Sun” (Live Auckland, New Zealand, 4/20/13)
7. “End of the Beginning” (Live Hamilton, ON, Canada, 4/11/14)
8. “Age of Reason” (Live Hamilton, ON, Canada, 4/11/14)

Black Sabbath, Paranoid and Master Of Reality come with rare bonus tracks

Black Sabbath have confirmed their first three albums will be released as deluxe editions in January.

Their 1970 self-titled debut, its same-year follow-up Paranoid and 1971’s Master Of Reality were remastered in 2012 but only previously available in digital format.

Each album comes with a second disc of outtakes and alternate versions, while the launch date coincides with the beginning of their final world tour.

Frontman Ozzy Osbourne recently stated that, although they’d planned to make one more album before splitting, the idea had been shelved. Guitarist Tony Iommi later said it had been bassist Geezer Butler’s decision.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_iR-pddN1IQ

Sabbath’s The End tour begins on January 20th in North America and takes in Australia, New Zealand and Europe – including a headline set at Download in the UK – before winding up back in the US on September 21st. The deluxe albums are released on January 22nd. Black Sabbath are the cover stars of the current edition of Metal Hammer, on sale now in print, digital and via TeamRock+.

BLACK SABBATH

DISC ONE

  1. Black Sabbath
  2. The Wizard
  3. Wasp/Behind the Wall Of Sleep/Bassically/N.I.B.
  4. Wicked World
  5. A Bit of Finger/Sleeping Village/Warning

DISC TWO

  1. Evil Woman (Don’t Play Your Games With Me)
  2. Black Sabbath – Studio Outtake
  3. Black Sabbath – Instrumental
  4. The Wizard – Studio Outtake
  5. N.I.B. – Alternate Version
  6. Evil Woman (Don’t Play Your Games With Me) – Alternate Version
  7. Sleeping Village (Intro) – Alternate Version
  8. Warning (Part 1) – Studio Outtake

PARANOID

DISC ONE

  1. War Pigs / Luke’s Wall
  2. Paranoid
  3. Planet Caravan
  4. Iron Man
  5. Electric Funeral
  6. Hand Of Doom
  7. Rat Salad
  8. Jack The Stripper/Fairies Wear Boots

DISC TWO

  1. War Pigs – Instrumental
  2. Paranoid – Alternate Lyrics
  3. Planet Caravan – Alternate Lyrics
  4. Iron Man – Instrumental
  5. Electric Funeral – Instrumental
  6. Hand Of Doom – Instrumental
  7. Rat Salad – Alternate Mix
  8. Fairies Wear Boots – Instrumental

MASTER OF REALITY

DISC ONE

  1. Sweet Leaf
  2. After Forever
  3. Embryo
  4. Children Of The Grave
  5. Orchid
  6. Lord Of This World
  7. Solitude
  8. Into The Void

DISC TWO

  1. Weevil Woman ’71
  2. Sweet Leaf – Studio Outtake
  3. After Forever – Studio Outtake Instrumental
  4. Children Of The Grave- Studio Outtake
  5. Children Of The Grave – Studio Outtake Instrumental
  6. Orchid – Studio Outtake
  7. Lord Of This World – Studio Outtake
  8. Solitude – Studio Outtake
  9. Into The Void (Spanish Sid) – Studio Outtake

Ozzy Osborne turns 67 today!
What would metal be without its own Prince of Darkness, or without Black Sabbath? Despite (or perhaps because of) his wild antics, his time fronting Black Sabbath and his solo work helped develop the world of heavy metal, and for that we thank him. Happy birthday, Ozzy! Hope it’s a happy and healthy one.

Blacksabbaththeend
After starting nearly five decades ago with a crack of thunder, a distant bell ringing and a monstrous riff that shook the earth.  The heaviest rock sound ever heard, and at that moment Heavy Metal music was born, created by a young band from Birmingham, England barely out of their teens.
The greatest Metal Band of all time, Black Sabbath Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler. Bill Ward close the final chapter in the final volume of the incredible BLACK SABBATH story.
BLACK SABBATH’s farewell tour, THE END, begins on January 20, 2016 and it promises to surpass all previous tours with their most mesmerizing production ever.
When this tour concludes, it will truly be THE END, THE END of one of the most legendary bands in Rock ‘n Roll history…  BLACK SABBATH

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a hypnotic cover version of the Black Sabbath track performed for the BBC at maida vale, Nicolas Jaar has a similar eerie style to his vocal as Ozzys original,


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